Episodios

  • A Change for the Better (Ezekiel 36–37)
    Mar 25 2026

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    A restless heart can chase a thousand paths and still come up empty. We walk through Ezekiel 36–37 to explore a hope that holds when everything else shakes: God’s promise to restore, cleanse, and breathe life where despair has settled in. From the renewal of the land to the renewal of the heart, the prophet maps a future where scattered people are gathered, shame is washed away, and a stone-cold will is warmed to life by the Spirit.

    We start with the hard truth of exile and the staggering claim that God acts for the sake of his name. That single motive turns the entire forecast from wishful thinking into anchored certainty. Clean water for uncleanness, a new heart and a new spirit, and an indwelling presence that reshapes desire—this isn’t surface change but deep transformation. Then the scene shifts to one of Scripture’s most arresting images: a valley of dry bones. As Ezekiel prophesies, skeletons reassemble, tendons knit, flesh returns, and breath rushes in. God declares the bones are “the whole house of Israel,” promising national resurrection where hope looked like dust.

    Unity follows life. God instructs Ezekiel to join two sticks—Judah and Joseph—into one. The divided kingdoms become a single people under one king, with David named and the sanctuary restored. Whether you read David as the beloved king serving under the Messiah or as a title pointing to Jesus, the son of David, the emphasis is the same: real leadership, true worship, and a people remade from the inside out. We also address the timing tied to the return of Christ and the millennial kingdom, while drawing a line to today’s questions: where does your heart rest, and what does repentance look like now?

    If your confidence feels thin, this conversation offers more than comfort; it offers a framework for hope rooted in God’s character. Listen for the sweep of promise and the personal call—turn from pride, receive cleansing, and find rest in Jesus. If the vision of dry bones can stand, so can your faith. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to join the conversation. Where is your heart resting today?

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    13 m
  • The Watchman’s Warnings . . . and Promises (Ezekiel 33–35)
    Mar 24 2026

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    A city falls, a prophet’s warning is vindicated, and the path from ruin to restoration comes into view. We journey through Ezekiel 33–35 to uncover how a watchman’s duty, a people’s personal responsibility, and a searing indictment of corrupt leaders converge to reveal a deeper hope: God himself promises to shepherd his scattered flock and establish lasting peace. Along the way, we confront the survivors’ flawed claim to the land, the danger of hearing truth without heeding it, and the sobering reality that covenant privilege never overrides ethical obedience.

    We speak candidly about spiritual leadership that wounds instead of heals. The shepherds of Israel fed themselves, not the flock, leaving the weak, sick, and lost to wander. God steps in with fierce mercy: I am against the shepherds, and then with tender resolve, I myself will be the shepherd of my sheep. That promise looks forward to the Good Shepherd, the Messiah, who gathers, binds, strengthens, and secures his people. We explore the prophetic picture of one shepherd, my servant David, and how this points to the reign of Jesus, with thoughtful perspectives on David’s future role and the contours of a restored, fruitful land where people dwell secure and unafraid.

    Edom’s judgment adds another layer: those who cherish enmity and revel in another’s fall will answer to a just God. The message is timeless and provocative: God disciplines his own and confronts hostile nations, defending his name and his people. The episode closes with a personal question that lingers beyond the final word: who is your shepherd today? Not the voice you enjoy, but the one you obey. If this exploration deepened your understanding of Ezekiel and sparked fresh resolve to follow the Good Shepherd, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review to help others find these conversations.

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    13 m
  • Headlines Announce the Downfall of Nations (Ezekiel 25–32)
    Mar 23 2026

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    Headlines from the ancient Near East still sound uncomfortably current: neighbors gloat at a rival’s fall, markets cheer a competitor’s collapse, and leaders claim they built the very rivers that feed them. We walk through Ezekiel 25–32 as a living map of pride and consequence, tracing God’s oracles over Ammon, Moab, Edom, Philistia, Tyre, Sidon, and Egypt to see how arrogance corrodes people and nations from the inside out.

    We start with the nations around Judah—mocking voices and old grudges that feel small until they summon real harm. Then we linger with Tyre, the shimmering trade hub that believed beauty and wealth made it unsinkable. When Jerusalem stumbled, Tyre smiled; when profits rose, conscience fell. Ezekiel answers with images you can’t forget: a perfect ship that goes down with all its cargo, a king who calls himself a god and learns he is only dust. The portrait widens into a glimpse of older pride—language reaching back to Eden and the anointed cherub—reminding us that human hubris often hides deeper currents, and yet none of it outruns God’s rule.

    From there we turn to Egypt, where Pharaoh boasts over the Nile as if he poured it himself. History pushes back. Babylon becomes the scalpel, Assyria the cautionary tale, and the great cedar crashes to the ground. The point isn’t despair; it’s clarity. Strength without humility is brittle, and empires without reverence eventually meet their limits. Still, woven through these judgments is a promise: Israel will be regathered and will know the Lord. That thread keeps us grounded—justice is not chaos, and correction is not the end of the story.

    If you’re hungry for a grounded take on ancient prophecy with modern relevance—power, economics, leadership, and the posture of the heart—press play and reflect with us. Subscribe for more thoughtful walkthroughs, share this with a friend who loves history and theology, and leave a review to join the conversation. Where do you see pride pretending to be strength today?

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    13 m
  • Bad News and More Bad News (Ezekiel 22–24)
    Mar 20 2026

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    A hard word can save a life, and Ezekiel’s voice carries that weight. We walk through Ezekiel 22–24 as the prophet lays out an unflinching indictment—bloodshed, idolatry, fraud, and the quiet collapse that follows when a people forget God. The courtroom gives way to the furnace: a searing image where dross floats to the surface and illusions burn away. Then the storytelling turns provocative and painfully human—two sisters chasing power like lovers, treaties dressed as desire, and the bitter end of letting empires define safety and truth.

    The moment everything becomes real is stamped with a date. A Babylonian siege tightens, and Jerusalem is pictured as a corroded cauldron, its people lifted out one by one until the pot itself is thrown into the flames. It’s poetry with teeth, and it sets up the most startling scene of all: God tells Ezekiel that the delight of his eyes—his wife—will die, and he must not mourn in public. That silence becomes a living prophecy for exiles who will be too stunned to weep when their temple falls and their children are lost. The grief is not performative; it is the stark mirror of a people who traded covenant love for the illusions of power.

    Yet a fierce mercy threads through the ash. “You shall know that I am the Lord” isn’t a taunt; it’s a promise that reality is anchored in God’s character, even when judgment lands. We reflect on how forgetting God unravels personal and national life, why alliances can become idols, and where hope stands when holiness demands justice. The path forward points to a Savior who bears the fire, turns judgment into rescue, and invites us to remember before we self-destruct.

    Listen, reflect, and share your takeaways with us. If this conversation helped you see justice and mercy with fresh eyes, subscribe, leave a review, and send the episode to someone who needs a clear word today.

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    13 m
  • Playing the Blame Game (Ezekiel 18–21)
    Mar 19 2026

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    What if the excuse you trust most is the very thing keeping you stuck? We open Ezekiel 18–21 and confront the sour grapes proverb head-on, trading the comfort of blame for the power of personal responsibility. Through vivid images and piercing lines, Ezekiel shows why no one is saved by a family name, and no one is doomed by it either. The soul that sins shall die, yet the one who turns will live—justice and mercy meet here, offering a way forward that starts with honesty.

    We move from the household to the throne room as Ezekiel’s poem of lion cubs reveals how Judah’s kings—Jehoahaz, Jehoiachin, and Zedekiah—fell under judgment for their own choices. Leadership carries weight, but it does not erase individual agency. Then the lens widens again as we trace Israel’s national story: rescued from Egypt, given the law, warned in the wilderness, and spared again and again by God’s grace. The pattern is sobering—rebellion, consequence, mercy—but it’s also profoundly hopeful, because a pattern can be broken. Ezekiel anchors that hope in a future when the Messiah reigns and the people return to wholehearted faithfulness.

    The closing images are hard to miss: a consuming fire and a polished sword, the blunt reality of consequences. Yet right beside them stands an open door to restoration: confess and be cleansed; leave the dry land of disobedience and step into green pastures with a faithful Shepherd. If you’ve been saying, “My past made me do it,” this conversation offers a better script: name your choices, seek forgiveness, and begin again. Subscribe, share with a friend who needs a nudge toward hope, and leave a review with one takeaway you’re acting on this week. What excuse are you laying down today?

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    12 m
  • Powerful Parables (Ezekiel 15–17)
    Mar 18 2026

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    A stalk of bananas hidden behind an old piano becomes a mirror for the human heart: we stash the evidence and hope it stays buried. From that vivid memory, we move into Ezekiel 15–17, where three parables strip away illusions about privilege, accountability, and the fate of a people who mistake covenant favor for immunity. The vine, good only for fruit, warns that identity without obedience is kindling. The unfaithful wife, rescued and cherished, abandons her vows for idols and unsafe alliances. And the two eagles, Babylon and Egypt, expose how political maneuvers collapse when truth and loyalty are traded for expedience.

    We walk through Judah’s near escapes and the certainty of a third, devastating fall. The images are not just ancient history; they read our present. Where do we lean on reputation instead of repentance? Where do we trust our beauty, our renown, our networks more than the One who made vows to redeem? The language is bracing—Jerusalem out-sinning Samaria and Sodom—because idolatry is not a small private vice but a public betrayal of love. Still, judgment is not the last line. Out of the ruin, God promises to plant a tender sprig on Israel’s heights, a sign of Messiah, a noble cedar where nations find shelter. Justice and hope meet here: exposure that leads to mercy, consequence that clears the way for renewal.

    We invite you into this journey from hidden peels to honest confession, from brittle vines to living fruit, from failed thrones to a kingdom set by God’s own hand. Listen for the warning that loves you enough to tell the truth and for the hope sturdy enough to carry you home. If this episode stirred you—challenged, comforted, or both—tap follow, share it with a friend, and leave a review telling us which image stayed with you most. Your reflections shape future conversations and help more listeners find their way to grace and truth.

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    12 m
  • The Truth Is Told (Ezekiel 12–14)
    Mar 17 2026

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    Hard truths have a way of finding us. We open Ezekiel 12–14 and step into a world where people cling to comforting slogans while reality closes in. Exiles in Babylon tell themselves the city will stand or that their return is just around the corner. Meanwhile, God asks Ezekiel to preach with a suitcase, to dig through his wall at night, and to act out the future everyone swears will never happen. The message is clear: delayed judgment isn’t canceled judgment, and denial is not the same as hope.

    We walk through the striking prophecy about King Zedekiah—taken to Babylon, yet never seeing it—and watch how Scripture’s precision slices through wishful thinking. From there, we confront the sales pitch of false prophets who spin timelines, sell breakthroughs, and whitewash flimsy walls with feel-good promises. Their words sound soothing because they cost us nothing—until the bill arrives. Then the focus shifts to the elders, polished on the outside but harboring idols within. God’s diagnosis is not vague; He names the heart’s attachments and calls for a decisive turn back to Him.

    All along, a deeper current runs beneath the warnings: mercy. God announces four acts of judgment—sword, famine, wild beasts, and pestilence—yet preserves a remnant and points beyond collapse to renewal. That is the pattern the gospel repeats. First, the bad news we would rather not face: sin is real and judgment is certain. Then, the good news that changes everything: Jesus offers forgiveness, freedom from hollow hopes, and a life anchored in truth. Join us as we expose counterfeit comfort, learn to read delay without drifting into denial, and rediscover a hope strong enough to carry us through hard news.

    If this conversation challenged you or helped you see truth more clearly, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review so others can find it. What hard truth are you choosing to face today?

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    12 m
  • Tragedy in the Temple (Ezekiel 8–11)
    Mar 16 2026

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    What if the presence you most need quietly walked out the door? We journey with Ezekiel through chapters 8–11, where God pulls back the curtain on a city that looks religious but runs on idols. Inside the temple, carved beasts crowd the walls, incense rises to creeping things, and men turn their backs to the sanctuary to worship the sun. It’s a vivid, unsettling portrait of misplaced worship—and a timely wake-up call for anyone tempted to trust money, pleasure, position, or even good causes more than God himself.

    As the vision unfolds, seven figures enter Jerusalem. One carries a writing case and marks those who sigh and groan over the city’s sins—a picture of a remnant grieved by evil and preserved by grace. Then comes the heartbreak: the glory of the Lord lifts from the inner court to the threshold, moves to the east gate, and departs toward the Mount of Olives. Ezekiel ties spiritual decay to civic ruin and calls out leaders who normalize wrongdoing, echoing James’ warning that teachers face stricter judgment. Greater influence invites greater inspection.

    Yet judgment is not the end of the story. God promises to guard the exiles, bring them home, and do what human resolve cannot—replace hearts of stone with hearts of flesh. The vision looks ahead to the new covenant and a future return when the Messiah’s feet stand on the Mount of Olives, where glory once departed and will one day return. We press into practical questions: What steals your awe? Where has influence outpaced integrity? How do we cultivate grief over sin without losing hope? Along the way, we chart a path back to the center—honest repentance, renewed worship, and a clear allegiance to Jesus.

    If this resonates, share it with a friend who leads, teaches, or wrestles with hidden idols. Subscribe for more explorations through Scripture, and leave a review to help others find the show. Most of all, take the next step: trade lesser gods for the living God today.

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    13 m